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In article , Ryk
wrote: On Tue, 16 May 2006 19:38:53 GMT, in message "Roger Long" wrote: Http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Strider0605.htm#Leak This is a perfect example of Long's First Law of Malfunctions. The first cause you find won't be the problem. The first cause won't be *all* of the problem. My boat is getting drier and drier with every little step along the way. Feel good about fixing things even when they don't entirely solve the problem. Sailing hard last season lead to excess water in the bilge. We eventually connected that to a shortage of water in the fresh water tanks. This spring I found a crack in a poly fitting on the tank that hardly leaked at all sitting in harbour. Which reminds me that I still need to caulk those openings in the anchor locker ;-) Oh, and I agree with your other correspondent that pulling props is a black art. I managed to deform the end of a shaft with a puller in the process of tackling a prop change. Heat and well applied impact loads seem to be important. I had no big problem removing the fixed prop with about a 2 1/2 inch shaft contact, but removing the Gori folder with more like 4 inches of contact was beyond me. Why? Was it a very slow taper, or a straight shaft? With a long slow taper I can see a wonderful wedging action happening when the retainint nut is torqued up tight. PDW |
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